Category: Sustainable Settlement and Agriculture

The Generator is founded on the simple premise that we should leave the world in better condition than we found it. The news items in this category outline the attempts people have made to do this. They are mainly concerned with our food supply and settlement patterns. The impact that the human race has on the planet.

Central NSW, Australia, throws down the gauntlet!

admin /16 July, 2010

Central NSW, Australia, throws down the gauntlet! The 17 Councils of Central NSW, Australia, are throwing down the gauntlet to challenge other regions for the title of the most resilient region in the world. To put their hand up for the title of the world’s most resilient region, they’re showcasing new stories every week on Continue Reading →

Pains, trains and automobiles

admin /15 July, 2010

Pains, trains and automobiles

Manly Hospital

How much longer? … Manly Hospital is in disrepair. Source: The Daily Telegraph

A MAJOR transport project – likely to be either the M4 East or M5 duplication – is expected to be announced in a last-ditch attempt to get Kristina Keneally out of the electoral mess.

Senior ministers and Labor strategists are pushing for a large transport announcement in a bid to arrest the slide in the Government’s primary vote, which has slumped to 25 per cent.

The proposal is being met with strong resistance by Treasury bureaucrats.

Senior Government sources confirmed a push was on for a major announcement in an attempt to address concern about congestion in western and southwestern Sydney.

Speculation the announcement will be the $10 billion M4 East will be fuelled today by the uncovering of Treasury documents which reveal the Government has secretly allocated $364 million more to forward estimates for the M4 East project. The allocation, not announced in last month’s state Budget, included $60 million in 2012-13 and $275 million in 2013-14.

Opposition Leader Barry O’Farrell yesterday accused the Government of dishonesty over the documents, revealed in a call for papers to the Upper House.

“Kristina Keneally is holding back a secret plan to announce a road Labor can’t build,” Mr O’Farrell said.

“Either she was holding this back for the election or didn’t want to put it out there because she knows nobody will believe she’s going to build it anyway.”

Ms Keneally is to convene a marathon Cabinet session next Tuesday in a bid to come up with strategies to arrest the Government’s poll slide.

When she returns to Sydney from her jaunt to China she will face crumbling infrastructure, which includes:

* CONDITIONS so bad at Manly Hospital that patients are buying chairs for nurses to sit on. As photos taken by a patient show, paint is peeling off the walls in the hospital where newborns are sleeping, gutters are falling down and the maternity ward and surrounding corridors are in disrepair, and

* YET more problems with the $2.3 billion Epping-to-Chatswood rail line, where RailCorp has botched the simplest of tasks – installing platform seats. Having spent $50,000 on 20 four-person bench seats for the new-look station at Epping, Railcorp discovered the seats couldn’t be bolted to the platform.

Show us your ticker, Gillard, before you force us to vote

admin /14 July, 2010

Show us your ticker, Gillard, before you force us to vote

July 14, 2010

    Comments 212

    Gillard keeping the nation guessing

Gillard tells young people to get on the Electoral rolls but has not announced the date of the Election.

Excuse me, but what’s the tearing hurry? We’ve had a new Prime Minister for five minutes, but we’re being rushed off to an election before we can get her measure. Why? Is there a fear, if the election were delayed until October, the gloss would have worn off and we’d see Julia Gillard in a less hopeful and flattering light?

Is the new leader’s fleeting honeymoon all that stands between Labor and electoral defeat? Is Labor’s record in government that bad? Is Tony Abbott such a formidable opponent?

I’m not impressed by what we’ve seen of the Gillard government so far. We’ve seen the triumph of political expediency over good government. From her first day she’s left little doubt three running political sores – the mining tax, resentment of boat people and the vacuum left by Labor’s abandonment of its emissions trading scheme – needed to be staunched quick smart if the government’s re-election were to be secured.

But what hasty, amateurish patch-up jobs we’ve seen. Wayne Swan has fudged up figures purporting to show the revenue cost of the deal done with the three biggest mining companies was minor, whereas sharemarket analysts are saying the extra tax to be paid by the companies will be minor. Then we had the fearful muddle over the Timor solution the Timorese hadn’t agreed to, and now we’re getting the climate change policy you have when you don’t have a climate change policy.

We’re going backwards together under Gillard

admin /13 July, 2010

We’re going backwards together under Gillard

LABOR has failed to get pedalling on economic reform.

TRADE economists liken economic reform to riding a bike: stop pedalling and you’ll stall, fall and struggle to get going again. You won’t “move forward together”, as Julia Gillard urged yesterday.

Contrary to some suggestions, Gillard’s truce with the miners doesn’t mean the end of genuine economic reform under Labor. Rather, it illustrates that Labor’s reform agenda never got pedalling in the first place.

Yes, the miners’ truce signals that vested interests can undercut economic reform and even politically decapitate a prime minister.

But Kevin Rudd won office on the back of the ACTU’s devastating scare campaign – worth $30 million according to some estimates – against John Howard’s labour market liberalisation. The reward to Labor’s industrial wing is the first serious reversal of the economic reform agenda of the past generation.

Tripodi referred to corruption watchdog

admin /13 July, 2010

Tripodi referred to corruption watchdog July 13, 2010 – 11:38AM Joe Tripodi … has been referred to the ICAC. Photo: Rob Homer Controversial NSW Labor MP Joe Tripodi has been referred to the state corruption watchdog over claims he told a former chief of NSW Maritime to create a $200,000 job, then recommended two Labor Continue Reading →

Souless corporations are the enemy of the environment.’says Pavan Sukhdev

admin /12 July, 2010

‘Soulless corporations are the enemy of the environment,’ says Pavan Sukhdev

It is up to society and its leaders to ensure that companies do not become cancerous, says leading UN official

 

Caroline Spelman Environment secretary Caroline Spelman will speak at the first Global Business of Biodiversity Symposium in London. Photograph: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

Modern businesses are “soulless corporations” that are in danger of becoming a “cancer” on society, a leading UN environmental official warns today.

Companies usually take a short-term view of the importance of the environment, said Pavan Sukhdev, head of the UN’s investigation into how to stop the destruction of the natural world. This short-term thinking is seen in their lobbying against new policies that could slow environmental devastation, he said.

Sukhdev, formerly an adviser to the Indian government and now on sabbatical from Deutsche Bank, spoke as he prepares to publish tomorrow one of the most eagerly awaited parts of his report – The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB) for Business.